Kitten Hiccups

After I rescued four two-week-old kittens who were orphaned when their mother was killed, I became the “momma cat” and started feeding them kitten formula with a syringe.

When I took the kittens to the vet clinic for a checkup, the vet asked me if they had gotten hiccups yet.

“No, they haven’t had hiccups,” I said.

“They will,” the vet said with a smile. “It happens sometimes when they eat too fast.”

“Should I do anything to help them if they get the hiccups?” I asked, wondering what in the world I could do for kitten hiccups. Tell the kittens to hold their breath? That’s what works for me.

“You don’t have to do anything,” the vet said. “They’ll go away on their own.”

Not long after that — sure enough, the kittens got hiccups. And sure enough, after a while, the hiccups went away.

That was more than 13 years ago. I still have the “kittens” (three of them, anyway; one died in October 2004 from chronic renal failure). And even today, as adult cats, they will occasionally get the hiccups. The hiccups last for a half a minute or a minute and then that’s the end of it.

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